icon caret-left icon caret-right instagram pinterest linkedin facebook twitter goodreads question-circle facebook circle twitter circle linkedin circle instagram circle goodreads circle pinterest circle

Dancing in the D.C. Area

A few pieces about dancing

 

Ballroom dancing in the DC Area (Pat McNees)
Irish céilís and set dances (Pat McNees)
Honky Tonkin' (Dan Zak, Washington Post, 9-6-07)
Love at First Waltz (Cheryl Collin)
Shuffling Off to Buffalo Gap Dance Camp (Pat McNees)

 

A few pieces about Hip Hop


Home Is Where the Heart of Hip-Hop Is (Anna Kodé, Real Estate section, NY Times, 12-7-23) Hip-hop got its start in a Bronx apartment building 50 years ago. The concept of home has been at the center of the genre ever since. Anna Kodé interviewed a dozen hip-hop artists and scholars for this story. She listened to and parsed hip-hop songs from the past five decades, looking for references of home.
Hip hop music (Wikipedia's long, well-illustrated write-up) Hip hop or hip-hop, also known as rap, and formerly known as disco rap, is a genre of popular music that originated in the early 1970s by African Americans in the Bronx, a borough of New York City. Hip-hop music originated as an anti-drug and anti-violence genre consisting of stylized rhythmic music (usually built around drum beats) that often accompanies rapping, a rhythmic delivery of poetic speech. According to professor Asante of African American studies at Temple University, "hip hop is something that blacks can unequivocally claim as their own".The music developed as part of the broader hip hop culture, a subculture defined by four key stylistic elements: MCing/rapping, DJing/scratching with turntables, break dancing, and graffiti art."
Will Gentrification Spoil the Birthplace of Hip-Hop? (David Gonzalez NY Times, 5-21-07) When tenants of 1520 Sedgwick came to her group in February, organizers stumbled on an interesting fact when they searched for the address online. “The first hundred hits said ‘birthplace of hip-hop.’ ”
Hip Hop Master Class


A few videos about dancing


History of the Spanish Ballroom (Glen Echo Park, Maryland, 3.5 min.)
Swing Jam Circle in the Spanish Ballroom (2013) Age no barrier. Most dancers don't dance that athletically.
Contra dancing at Glen Echo's Dance Pavilion
Swing dancing at Glen Echo to Doc Scantlin (2013)
Tango: It's Not Just a Dance (YouTube video) Carol Meier's excellent video-narration of the history, music, and origins of Tango, from early in the 20th century on. Informative video and narration conveys the complexity, pleasures, and difficulty of this addictive and demanding dance form. For example, the male tango dancer does not wear pants with cuffs because it would be too easy for the woman's high heel to get caught in them.
Salty Dog Rag (Folkdance Noa-am)
Bottle Dance from Fiddler on the Roof (clip from the movie)
KLEZMER Israeli Dance Yoav Ashriel
Klezmer dance music (Imani Winds)


 

Dancing helps fend off dementia--so go crazy on the dance floor!

In terms of reduced risk of dementia, here is how some of the activities, mental and physical, stacked up:
Bicycling and swimming – 0% reduced risk
Playing golf – 0%
Reading – 35%
Doing crossword puzzles at least four days per week – 47%
Dancing frequently – 76% – the greatest risk reduction of any activity studied, cognitive or physical.

[The source has disappeared, but I'm leaving the numbers here.--PM]

 

Science Daily: "Dance therapy improves seniors' gait, balance, researcher finds."
Kick up your heels – ballroom dancing offers benefits to the aging brain and could help stave off dementia (Research Brief, The Conversation, 1-3-23) Not only is it good aerobic exercise, but dancing may help the elderly with reasoning skills and memory.

That's it!

A lot of the entries that follow seem to have been rendered out of date by the Covid Pandemic. Above I have pulled together the dance venues and activities that still seem to be happening.

Below are scraps of the old dance page, which I have to go through and delete or update. I just don't have time to do it right now.

-- Pat McNees

 

Dance Forums on various specialties, and here's a collection of articles about dancing.

Dancing in Other Cities
Let me know what links I should add here.
Seven Day Guide to Folk, Social and Traditional Dancing in and around Philadelphia
Central Jersey dancing
Swing dance in Boston and New England
The Back of the Closet (a wonderful miscellany)
Dance Gypsy (the search engine does NOT turn up all dances in DC area)

Diamond Dance Circle (The International Folk Dancers of Bethesda).

Folk Dancing (Elliot and Karen Bogart's DC Folk Dance web page, with information about international folk dancing , Scandinavian folk dancing, Israeli dances, and contra dancing

Folk Dancing in the Capital Area
This page has been updated and reorganized. You'll find dances listed in these categories:
Folk dance guides and calendars for the DC area
Contra dances in the Capital area
English and Scottish country dancing (and Morris dancing)
International folk dancing International (Bulgarian, Romanian, Albanian, Macedonian, Serbian, Roma, etc), Scottish, English, Scandinavian and Israeli folk dancing
Videos of folk dancing

Glen Echo dancing calendar (click on events). Here are some videos of dancing there, in the Spanish Ballroom and the Bumper Car Pavilion:
Swing dancing in the Spanish Ballroom
A waltz in the Bumper Car Pavilion (to one of my favorite waltzes)
Friday night contra dance in Spanish Ballroom (this gives a good view both of the ballroom and of what contra dancing is like. Nerds prefer contra to ballroom because it is "called" and it is a predictable set of steps--yet you can see the ample room for variations).
Dawn Hampton, who danced at the Savoy Ballroom, dancing with John Dokes at Glen Echo (at the Gottaswing dance, which emphasizes 8-count swing, or Lindy). One thing you'll notice: this is a cross-generational venue.
Dancing a Scandinavian Hambo in the Bumper Car Pavilion
The Friday Night Contra Dance in the Spanish Ballroom (one way it differs from American Square Dancing is that the music is always live--and there are GREAT contra bands in the DC area)
Dentzel Carousel (outside the Spanish Ballroom, in Glen Echo Park)


Richard Powers, Historic Social Dance (a/k/a Vintage Dance). Powers, based in the Stanford Dance Division, sometimes does workshops in the DC area, and some dancers travel to go to his workshops. The strong vintage dance series we once enjoyed at Glen Echo died out, sadly. But you can learn a lot from these articles on Richard's dance website Great Partnering.
Welcome Chance Intrusions! ("Lateral-thinking dancers see differences from what they expected to happen as opportunities, not mistakes.")
Sketchy Guys
Conditional vs. Absolute Learning (the power of uncertainty)
The American Spirit of Creativity and Crossover
Intelligent Dance . Intelligence is what we use when we don't already know what to do, wrote Jean Piaget. Powers applies this to dance (vs. authority-based dancing).
The Three Worlds of Ballroom Dance (social, competitive, exhibition)
Thoughts, philosophies and musings on social dance (these and more stories by Richard Powers)

Washington Swing Dance Committee (Facebook page). The Facebook page is more useful than the now ad-heavy old WSDC website

Videos showing various kinds of swing dancing
Boogie woogie (a superfast, energetic swing dance, with aerials) as danced by Maeva and Will, with Silvan Zingg on piano (YouTube video)
Swing dancing at Glen Echo's Spanish Ballroom (six-count)
DC Hand Dancing, old style (from '50s and '60s)
DC Hand Dancing (Mike and Joyce Chucci and Patricia)
Dancing at DC Hand Dance Club (June 2009)
MADjam 2012 Champions Jack & Jill Final - Arjay Centeno & Melissa Rutz.mov (West Coast swing champions)
Greg Scott and Hannah Wenzel perform their Classic West Coast Swing routine (mind you, not everyone does it this well!)
Baltimore Dance: The Friday Night Swing Dance Club (held in Towson, MD, video from 2009)




This spot on my personal website is a stand-in for Dancing: A Guide to the Capital Area, my information-packed guide to social dancing, mostly in the suburbs of DC. It includes a social history of social dancing in and around Washington, D.C., including the Maryland and Northern Virginia suburbs, describing and listing nearly 200 regular dances, dance groups, and classes in:

International, Cajun, German, Greek, Hungarian, Indian, Israeli, Italian, Polish, Turkish, and Scandinavian folk dancing;

English and Scottish country dancing and Irish ceilis, American squares and contras, morris dancing, and clogging;

Ballroom dancing, swing (East coast and West coast, lindy, jitterbug, shag, and so on--and Charleston), and country western;

And the marvelous Sunday waltzes and LaSalle Band tea dances at Glen Echo Park -- in the Spanish Ballroom and/or the Bumper Car Pavilion (link below), where the contra dances Friday and Sunday evenings are also held, as well as countless swing, ballroom, Cajun, and zydeco dances. Glen Echo's ballroom is generally VERY sweaty in the summer months, as there is no air-conditioning, but as of June 2006 there were six wonderful big standing fans in the ballroom, which suggests that the park management is listening to dancers' suggestions!

This little guide (very slowly being revised, because I am swamped with other work) was most recently available through Travel Books & Language Center, 202-237-1322.

"What an extraordinary job. I can't believe that you've done such a complete search. Very valuable."
-- Dr. Gabe Mirkin, fitness expert

"Well worth the price." --Country Dance & Song Society News

"An essential tool for the neophyte." -- Michael Dolan,author of The American Porch, in Washingtonian Magazine

My favorite dance is the Sunday afternoon waltz at Glen Echo's Spanish Ballroom (or, second Sundays, the ballroom dances to the LaSalle Band's music from the '20s and '30s), with swing and jitterbug a close second -- and little by little (it takes forever)I am learning the Argentine tango. But I've tried most of the kinds of dancing offered in the Washington area --a surprisingly wonderful and affordable venue for dancing. Elsewhere on this site are selections from my guide to dancing in the capital area, which I put together because many of the dances aren't listed in the Post's Weekend Section. (It is their policy to list only dances with live music, although many kinds of dances are done to recorded music, including Argentine tango and many kinds of folk dancing.)

"This guide is as entertaining as it is informative."
--Roberta Gottesman, Finding Fun & Friends in Washington

Other dance pages on Pat's website


Dancing: A guide to the Capital area (Dancing in DC, Maryland, and Northern Virginia)
Ballroom Dance
Ceilis (Irish céilís and set dances)
Country Western Dancing
Folk dancing in the Capital area (Contra, English country, international, Irish, Israeli, Scandinavian, Scottish)
Love at First Waltz (by Cheryl Kollin)
Shuffling Off to Buffalo Gap Dance Camp (Pat McNees)
Swing, lindy, jitterbug, shag, and hand-dancing
Dating -- again! (that's extra, but often relevant -- dancing is one way to restore your social self, after separation)
Many of the stories by Pat McNees posted here appeared first in the Washington Post

[Back to Top]